A write-up of panels about harassment at the 2014 Emerald City Comicon.

Signs proclaiming, “Costumes Are Not Consent” were visible all over the convention center as tacit reminders for guests to be respectful of one another. The signs included informational resources for anyone being harassed, stating explicitly where to go and who could help. While though this year’s ECCC had an incredibly positive feeling, there remain opportunities to improve spaces within geek culture to be inclusive, safe places for everyone — a process that begins by identifying the problems.

The police officers in the report expressed disgust at the activity of writing fanfiction; one stated that he believed writing and reading slash “promotes homosexuality,” a comment that angered Chinese netizens. Offbeat China noted that many of China’s slash fangirls have defiantly labeled themselves “rotten women (腐女)” in order to highlight the banality of what they do. On Weibo, 咖啡呆丶LM angrily responded:

This is not cleaning the cyberspace. This is pure discrimination. I may never see a rainbow flag fly above China in my life time.

I’ve been having trouble writing even a few lines about this patriarchal nonsense (the arrests, not the articles) because it makes me so angry. Here’s an article that sums up some of the importance of fanworks:

To weigh in on this crackdown in China, on a personal note: I don’t often see people like me in mainstream media. When I do, they have to be “corrected” (choose a more mainstream gender expression or sexuality) or aren’t allowed to express who they are (and not because the character is scared) or they die tragically. (I do love a tragedy, but it would be nice if more lived to balance things out. And I can’t say who because spoilers.) People like me exist and live to fight another day in fanfic because people who are like me write fanfic. However, people who aren’t straight men don’t get to have sexualities, apparently, soapparently we’ve all hopped back a time machine to the time of anti-obscenity/anti-sodomy laws which smacks of British imperialism in China and (╯°□°）╯︵ ┻━┻

Moving along from fanfic to SFF writing: Warning: Vox Day’s comments, quoted later in the article, are not mind safe. Let’s hope for a “no award” vote.

So our old friend Vox Day – the proudly bigoted science fiction/fantasy writer and self-professed expert on all things “Alpha” – is in the news again. This time, it’s not for declaring most date rape imaginary or writing a racist diatribe against a fellow author [NK Jemisin]. Nope! It’s because another of his literary efforts, a novelette entitled Opera Vita Aeterna, just got nominated for a Hugo award.

Meanwhile, N.K. Jemisin is amazing, and you can check out some of her work at Podcastle.

Open-Source Feminism

The idea that technology is not neutral is a pretty heavy thought. Though the whole point of open-source technology is that it’s made stronger and better through collaboration, actually learning to use the technology is not an equal playing field.

A blow-by-blow account of several concurrent incidents of misogyny in the STEM side of geekdom from last week. The author’s content warning: intimate partner violence, workplace harassment, verbal abuse, sexism.

Folks who hang out around these parts are probably familiar with our Timeline Of Incidents, which documents sexist behavior in tech and other geek fields. While it’s a great resource, scrolling down through that hall of shame is a poor approximation for what it’s like being a woman having to deal with these incidents in real time.

It can be painful. Stressful. Scary. Difficult. Mostly, for me, it’s exhausting. And I know I’m not the only one who feels that way. I hang out with a lot of women in tech, and “this week is fired” has been a common refrain, these last few days.